Israel strikes kill 8 in Yemen’s Houthi-held capital

An image from Al-Masirah TV shows damage caused by an Israeli strike in Sanaa on Thursday. (AFP)
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Updated 25 September 2025
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Israel strikes kill 8 in Yemen’s Houthi-held capital

  • Israeli forces struck several Houthi-linked targets in Sanaa, Israeli officials said
  • Attack follows a Houthi drone strike on southern Israel

SANAA: Israel struck Sanaa on Thursday, killing at least eight people and wounding more than 140, Yemen’s Houthis said, a day after the rebels launched a drone attack on southern Israel.
Israeli forces struck several Houthi-linked targets in the rebel-held capital, Israeli officials said, warning of more attacks to come. Houthi media said the targets included a detention facility.
AFP correspondents in Sanaa heard explosions and saw plumes of smoke rising from three locations in the Sanaa area, in the latest retaliatory attack since the Houthis began targeting Israel in the wake of the Gaza war.
Houthi health ministry spokesman Anees Alasbahi said in a post on X that the tally “rose to eight martyrs and 142 wounded,” adding that rescuers were still searching for victims under the rubble.




An image from Al-Masirah TV shows damage caused by an Israeli strike in Sanaa on Thursday. (AFP)Caption


The Houthis’ Al-Masirah television channel said, citing a security source, that Israel “targeted one of the (security and intelligence) service’s correctional facilities, which houses a number of prisoners and detainees.”
Al-Masirah earlier said that a power station and two residential neighborhoods had been targeted, sharing pictures that showed low-rise buildings with bombed-out windows.
One picture showed twisted metal and pieces of concrete filled the street as people looked on, with another photo showing people on the roof of a badly damaged building.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a post on X that Israel had “dealt a powerful blow to numerous terror targets of the Houthi terror organization in Sanaa.”
An Israeli military statement said the targets included the Houthis’ general staff headquarters, other security and intelligence sites including some used to store weapons and “plan and execute” attacks on Israel.
It added that the rebels’ “military public relations headquarters” was also targeted.
Katz said the Israeli forces had “struck several military camps... eliminated dozens of Houthi terror operatives, and destroyed stockpiles of UAVs (drones) and weaponry.”
The military statement said Israel would “conduct additional offensive operations against the Houthi regime in the near future.”

Failed interception

The Israeli strikes on Sanaa came moments before Al-Masirah began broadcasting rebel leader Abdul Malik Al-Houthi’s weekly pre-recorded speech.
The impact sites were cordoned off, an AFP correspondent said. The Houthi authorities have previously warned Yemenis against publishing footage of locations hit in strikes, describing it as “a service to the enemy.”
On Wednesday, a drone attack claimed by the Houthis struck the southern Israeli tourist resort of Eilat after failed attempts by Israel’s air defenses to intercept it.
Rescuers reported 22 wounded including two in serious condition.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Katz warned of a severe response.
The Iran-backed Houthi rebels began targeting Israel with missiles and drones, as well as attacking vessels they deem linked to the country, after the 2023 start of the Gaza war.
The Houthis say they act in solidarity with Palestinians.
Israel in response has carried out strikes in Yemen, mainly targeting infrastructure such as ports, power stations and Sanaa’s international airport.
In August, Israel assassinated the head of the Houthi government Ahmed Ghaleb Nasser Al-Rahawi together with other senior officials.
Earlier this month, Israeli strikes killed 46 people, according to Houthi authorities.
The dead include journalists working for the September 26 and Al-Yaman newspapers, who were killed in an attack on Sanaa that targeted the Houthi’s military media operation.


Sudan general ready to talk to Trump for peace

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Sudan general ready to talk to Trump for peace

  • Sudan’s de facto leader, General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, is ready to work with US President Donald Trump to resolve the conflict splitting his country, the foreign ministry said Tuesday
PORT SUDAN: Sudan’s de facto leader, General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, is ready to work with US President Donald Trump to resolve the conflict splitting his country, the foreign ministry said Tuesday.
The ministry released a statement after the army chief visited Riyadh as a guest of Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who recently presented Trump with a proposed Sudan peace plan during a Washington visit.
According to Sudan’s statement, Burhan hailed Trump’s “determination to engage in efforts to achieve peace and end the war in the country, with the participation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
“He affirmed Sudan’s keenness to work with President Trump, his secretary of state, and his envoy for peace in Sudan to achieve this unquestionably noble goal,” it said, referring to Marco Rubio and US envoy Massad Boulos.
International peace efforts led by mediators from the United States, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have been at a standstill since Burhan rejected Boulos’s last suggested framework.
The RSF says it supports the international ceasefire plan, but heavy fighting continues, notably in the southern region of Kordofan.
For the moment, no new date has been announced for talks, neither under the US-led mediators nor a parallel United Nations’ led effort.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a war pitting the army, which controls the north and east of the country, against the RSF, dominant in the west and certain areas of the south.
The conflict has killed tens of thousands of people, uprooted millions and triggered what the UN calls “the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.”